Short Fiction by O. Henry (librera reader txt) π
Description
William Sydney Porter, known to readers as O. Henry, was a true raconteur. As a draftsman, a bank teller, a newspaper writer, a fugitive from justice in Central America, and a writer living in New York City, he told stories at each stop and about each stop. His stories are known for their vivid characters who come to life, and sometimes death, in only a few pages. But the most famous characteristic of O. Henryβs stories are the famous βtwistβ endings, where the outcome comes as a surprise both to the characters and the readers. O. Henryβs work was widely recognized and lauded, so much so that a few years after his death an award was founded in his name to recognize the best American short story (now stories) of the year.
This collection gathers all of his available short stories that are in the U.S. public domain. They were published in various popular magazines of the time, as well as in the Houston Post, where they were not attributed to him until many years after his death.
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- Author: O. Henry
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The Post Man had seen so many people with the corners rubbed off, so many men who always say and do what they are expected to, that he fell into the humor of listening to this man who said unexpected things. And then he was so strange to look upon.
The tramp was not drunk, and his appearance was not that of a drinking man. His features were refined and clear-cut in the moonlight; and his voiceβ βwell, his voice was queer. It sounded like a man talking plainly in his sleep.
The Post Man concluded that his mind was unbalanced.
The tramp spoke again.
βI said I had plenty of money,β he continued, βand I have. I will show a fewβ βa very few of the wonders that you respectable, plodding, well-dressed people do not imagine to exist. Look at this ring.β
He took from his finger a curious carved ring of beaten copper, wrought into a design that the moonlight did not suffer to be deciphered, and handed it to the reporter.
βRub that ring thrice with the thumb of your left hand,β said the tramp.
The reporter did so, with a creepy feeling that made him smile to himself. The trampβs eyes beamed, and he pointed into the air, following with his finger the movements of some invisible object.
βIt is Artamela,β he said, βthe slave of the ringβ βcatch!β
He swept his hollowed hand into space, scooping up something, and handed it to the reporter.
βSee!β he said, βgolden coins. I can bring them at will in unlimited numbers. Why should I beg?β
He held his empty hand with a gesture toward the reporter, who pretended to accept its visionary contents.
The tramp took off his hat and let the breeze sift through his tangled hair.
βWhat would you think,β he said, βif I should tell you that I am 241 years old?β
βKnock off a couple of centuries,β said the reporter, βand it will go all right.β
βThis ring,β said the tramp, βwas given me by a Buddhist priest in Benares, India, a hundred years before America was discovered. It is an inexhaustible source of wealth, life and good luck. It has brought me every blessing that man can enjoy. With such fortune as that there is no one on earth that I envy. I am blissfully happy and I lead the only ideal life.β
The tramp leaned on the railing and gazed down the bayou for a long time without speaking. The reporter made a movement as if to go, and he started violently and faced around. A change had come over him. His brow was lowering and his manner cringing. He shivered and pulled his coat tight about him.
βWot wuz I sayinβ?β he said in a gruff, husky voice. βWuz I a talkinβ? Hello, there, mister, canβt you give a feller a dime to get him some supper?β
The reporter, struck by the transformation, gazed at him in silence.
The tramp muttered to himself, and with shaking hands drew from his pocket something wrapped in paper.
He unrolled it, took something from it between his thumb and finger and thrust it into his mouth.
The sickly, faint, sweet odor of gum opium reached the reporter.
The mystery about the tramp was solved.
The Barber TalksThe Post Man slid into the chair with an apologetic manner, for the barberβs gaze was superior and scornful. He was so devilish, cool and selfpossessed, and held the public in such infinite contempt.
The Post Manβs hair had been cut close with the clippers on the day before.
βHaircut?β asked the barber in a quiet but thoroughly dangerous tone.
βShave,β said the Post Man.
The barber raised his eyebrows, gave his victim a look of deep disdain, and hurled the chair with a loud rattle and crash back to a reclining position.
Then he seized a mug and brush and, after bestowing upon the Post Man a look of undying contumely, turned with a sneer to the water faucet. Thence he returned, enveloped the passive victim in a voluminous cloth, and with a pitiless hand daubed a great brushful of sweetish tasting lather across his mouth.
Then he began to talk.
βEver been in Seattle, Washington Territory?β he asked.
βBlub-a-lub-blub,β said the Post Man, struggling against the soap, and then he shook his head feebly.
βNeither have I,β said the barber, βbut I have a brother named Bill who runs an orange orchard nine miles from St. John, Fla. Thatβs only a split hair on your neck; itβs growing the wrong way. They are caused by shaving the neck in the wrong direction. Sometimes whiskey will make them do that way. Whisky is a terrible thing. Do you drink it?β
The Post Man only had one eye of all his features uncovered by lather and he tried to throw an appealing expression implying negation into this optic, but the barber was too quick for him and filled the eye with soap by a dextrous flap of his brush.
βMy brother Bill used to drink,β continued the barber. βHe could drink more whiskey than any man in Houston, but he never got drunk. He had a chair in my shop, but I had to let him go. Bill had a wonderful constitution. When he got all he could hold he would quit drinking. The only way he showed it was in his eyes. They would get kind of glazed and fishy and wouldnβt turn in his head. When Bill wanted to look to one side he used to take his fingers and turn
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